What to know about March Madness if you don바카라 게임 웹사이트t follow college basketball
The college basketball season is winding down, which means March Madness is upon us.
Related video above: Dr. Tim Chartier talks about March Madness
The annual men's and women's National Collegiate Athletic Association tournaments are among the most closely watched sporting events in the U.S.
No matter how much you know about college basketball 바카라 게임 웹사이트 if you바카라 게임 웹사이트re looking to follow the fun, make your own bracket or even just understand what all the fuss is about 바카라 게임 웹사이트 here are some key things to know.
What is March Madness?
It's the basketball world's term to reference the upsets, chaos, remarkable plays and historic moments that are sure to happen in postseason tournaments.
It all starts with teams playing a tournament against the other schools in their conference, which is the division that a school competes in during the regular season. One slipup there and a team could find itself 바카라 게임 웹사이트on the bubble,바카라 게임 웹사이트 or at risk of missing the ensuing NCAA Tournament.
And it ends with the ultimate prize: a school being crowned the champion as 바카라 게임 웹사이트One Shining Moment바카라 게임 웹사이트 is played over the airwaves.
The first NCAA Tournament in 1939 consisted only of eight men바카라 게임 웹사이트s teams. Today, it바카라 게임 웹사이트s a 68-team bracket that includes multiple single-elimination rounds.
The women바카라 게임 웹사이트s tournament was formally added to the NCAA championship program in 1981, following the same format as the men바카라 게임 웹사이트s. Typically, both championship games are scheduled for the same weekend in different cities.
The teams are selected, seeded and placed in a bracket by an NCAA committee made up of 12 members. The brackets are broken up into four regions: Midwest, East, South and West.
The goal of the committee is to create a bracket that바카라 게임 웹사이트s equally competitive in each region.
The bracket formation process takes place the Sunday before the tournament begins, known as Selection Sunday.
Why is it called March Madness?
The term 바카라 게임 웹사이트March Madness바카라 게임 웹사이트 was first used by Henry V. Porter, a high school official in Illinois, in 1939. But the term wasn't officially used in reference to college basketball until 1982, when CBS broadcaster Brent Musburger used it during that year바카라 게임 웹사이트s coverage.
Most of the tournament rounds have adopted their own names as well. There바카라 게임 웹사이트s the First Four, Sweet 16, the Elite Eight and, of course, the Final Four.
Why do I hear so much about March Madness brackets?
Every year, millions of people fill out their own brackets in hopes of correctly guessing who will win each round. It바카라 게임 웹사이트s a nationwide phenomenon that takes over offices, families and friend groups, with spectators and sports bettors competing to see who will have the most accurate bracket.
A huge reason why March Madness is so popular is its unpredictability. Lower-seeded teams regularly beat the higher-seeded ones, throwing brackets and predictions completely out of the window.
How is the bracket created?
Thirty-one of the 68 teams automatically qualify to play in the NCAA Tournament because they won their respective conference tournaments. The remaining 37 teams are chosen by that 12-person committee mentioned earlier.
Next, the committee will seed all of the teams. It determines seeding by wins, losses, strength of schedule and other metrics.
The teams are seeded from one to 16 within each of the four regions. The top-seeded team will play the bottom-seeded team, and so on.
In 2011, when the tournament expanded from 64 to 68 teams, it also introduced the First Four round. That pits the four lowest-seeded automatic qualifiers and the four lowest-seeded at-large teams against each other. The winners enter the traditional bracket.
What if I fill out a perfect bracket?
Well, you바카라 게임 웹사이트d be the first.
The odds of doing so . The closest anyone has ever gotten on the men's side was an Ohio man in 2019 who predicted the entire tournament into the Sweet 16.
If you do happen to make a perfect bracket, there could be more in it for you than just bragging rights.
Perfect bracket pickers have been offered as much as $1 billion. That's the figure Warren Buffett offered to his Berkshire Hathaway employees in 2014 if any of them picked it perfect.